Night Strike wrote:Symmetry wrote:Night Strike wrote:I DID watch the whole thing. And the coverage we had stated that the producer's goal in that segment was to showcase the two most lasting British contributions to the world: children's literature and socialized medicine. That was after they showed the British leading the world out of an agrarian society into the industrial revolution.
You saw the rest of it, about Britain's contribution to music, and the centrepiece of Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the world-wide web? The tribute to British film? Did you see the Rowan Atkinson bit paying tribute to classical music and British comedy, as well as British athletics.
Yes, I watched the entire opening ceremony. The "music party" was pretty boring to me, and they completely left out Elton John. What did he do to piss off the producer? The Rowan Atkinson section was hilarious while the WWW section was simply a token moment instead of an actual centerpiece of value. My favorite effect was the forging of the ring, while the Bond/queen segment was very entertaining.Woodruff wrote:This highlights how you seem to form most of your opinions - broadcasters tell you what they are.
Considering I didn't have the show-notes sitting next to me during the show like the broadcasters did, then yes, they are necessary to state why sections were included in the program.
I'm guessing that the idea that the NHS and Childrens' Lit were the greatest achievements of the UK was more a product of the US broadcaster's confusion than your own opinion. Would that be fair? It's pretty much why I started this thread- that that particular part seems to have been most baffling to the US media.